The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 19, 1928, Page 7

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Y 5 at i “:w‘fl“.%!flmflfl]"l QuLasKl HARRY BANNISTER BARRY TOWKEY LOUS Swur THEENAN EDOUARD ALBICN ‘weRe 20.000.000 Yk STRonG! AURIC € ABRAKAMAS OSCAR LEvanT ABE Lidtan HERRY DEVMAR AL StiTi MAURICE CAMPBEIL MBI BUCKLEY Max Triorek . PeTe Kvne CUDIE ADAMS IRA MORGAN 808 SibDons. JiM PETRILG QH.CALDWELL HaRRy EL COMN M:SHANE GENE AUsTin JosTice @ DW&Ew BRIAN NN SE KLEINFELD P2} PHIL REISMAN Z. BARNEY KEuy FRANK _ KIREY Bilv ErADY THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE TUESDAY JUNE 19 |928 By B[LLE, DE BECK € COuMTED oM NOU \] BARNEN = NOU KNOW WE LONT UKE T THROwW / HESE PARTES el \AITHC \v\n > T Gor Nou - T k0w & ’CC:AL MvME“Q‘ N et Ln UKE & G, | an. =BUT TaneHTs BATH NIGHT YOy \ru\w,.\ 3T GOTTA PeRY | AP I CERTANLY WouLh ! \T SEEMS To Me HE'S MAKING QuiTe AN UNNE CESSARY CEREMONY Nov D THINK BARNEY WOULD HANE CoMe rONlQHT w«sulor\\‘r Nov €D ¢ DONT HANE T LIVE WITH NOu AND L OME! EwIs | WaXMAN ? Mawcoim WAITE Weather Conditions As Recorded by the U. S, Weather Bureau Forecast for Juneau and vie nity, beginning 4 p. m. today: Cloudy tonight, casterly winds. Wednesday rain and colder; fresh south- LOCAL DATA Time— 4 p. m. yest'y. 30.13 4 a. m. today .30.12 Noon teday 30.05 68 49 70 Barom. Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity 37 NW 15 Weather Clear Pt. Cldy Clear 72 39 N NW 2 10 CABLE AND BADIO REPURTS YBSTERDAY Highest 8 p.m. | Stations uu \p.__temp. +__te Nome ... Bethel LIS Fort' Yukon ... Tanana Eagle St. Paul Dutch Harbor Kodiak Cordova Juneau Ketchikan Prince Rupert Bdmonton Seattle Portland San Francisco i | |' | 1 | 70 8 70 g ! 80 70 TODAY §a.m. Precip. _8am. ). Velocity 24 hrs. Weather Pt. Cldy ldy Clear Pt. Cldy Cldy Rain s Cldy Rain Rain Pt. Cldy Clear Clay Cldy Pt. Cldy Cldy 0 Pt Cldy s than 10 miles. Low Sa.m. temp. tem 42 48 12 38 38 10 16 50 46 16 44 NOTE.—Obscrvations Juneau, Prince Rupert, Francisco are made at 4 a A severe storm and the barometer The pressure is high in the oc northeastward through British Rain has been general from Co prevails over the Interior and Temperatures have risen in m. is central St. Ldmonton, south is falling rapidly cean west of the Pacific States Columbia and South Paul, Dutch Harbor, Kodiak, Seattle Portland and 4 p. m. Juncau time. Bun and Peninsula of of the Aleutian thoughcut most ern Al a rdova westward and fair weather from this vicinity southward. nearly all portions cf the Territory. | DOUGLAS NEWS {TWO COUPLES WEDDED IN DOUGLAS SATURDAY The united States fellowing couples in marriage v United Commission: r residence here last Satur- day afternoon: Miss Nina Rhodes and Mr. Clet- ,tis Groves of Juneau. They w “attended by Bessie Winther and| Olaf Winther. Frank Godines and Mary Jack- son, also Juneau residents. — .o ; MRS. WATKINS LEAVES TO VISIT RELATIVES Mrs. Earl ! ded by her Watk accompan- son Harry, left this . morning on the Princess Louise | for Idaho where she will her mother who is cominz there ! to visit another daughter { whom she has not seen for about ! eight years. ! turn in a month or six wecks, } ———— |l' ROGERS CALLS HERE ) WITH 69 TONS FREIGHT t i Bringing 19 tons of general] freight and 50 tons of coal for { here, the Admiral Rogers was in " Douglas for several hours yester- day afternoon. ¢ Mrs. Emil Rojas and child for "B‘kwwuy were the only passen- “gers leaving here on the Rogers.: > VISITS IN DOUGLAS yesterday, Miss Anne Dolish, who is on her way to Haines for a | short stay there, was a visitor on the Island as the guest of Miss Beth Anderson. H ———.————— 1 FOURTEEN YEARS OLD ? i l While the Rogers was in port Geneva Fecro celebrated her rtuunesnlh birthday yesterday af- ; ternoon with a happy party for | many of her young friends. —_———— LEAVE FOR ANCHORAGE Leaving on the Yukontoday arc ,Miss Elva Kirkham and Leonard son for Anchorage where the latter is returning to his home; and the former will visit with her Il&!er, Mrs. George L. John- son, ——e ot The reason some homes m't Snoed an attic 13 because the fam- ily has to keep selling off the furniture to raise mofiey to meet the payments on the car. e ‘There isn't anybody on earth hinks sh were ' visit | She expects to re-| "AIRSHIP OF WARTIME 1S DEMOLISHED PULHAM, Britain’s England, Junz veteran airship, or of war-time cruisers, is being broken up | Pulham airdrome. She had not 'been in the air two yea when she made a_flight before visiting premiers from British Don 19- R-33, at ynnd in the view of the air minis. -Jum: au last n us“fuh te: try there is mo further lwm‘k for her to do. The R-33 will always be remem.! |bered in Britain for her flight three years ago. from her moorings at Pulham by |a heavy gale, with only a skele- ton crew aboard, she weathered a! heavy storm that blew her to Holland and returned to her base despite a broken nose. | Her successful famous navigation ' was acclaimed by air over the world. No ble has more for experimental She was used for tests for new mooring masts, landing, night launching ‘of airplanes, and wind pressure. When, after a period of inac- |cided to resume airship building {the R-23 was sclected ‘to undergo |the most exhaustive series - of aerodynamic tests ever planned, and from these the air ministry experts secured valuable data that has influenced the design of R-100 and k-101, dirigibles now under construction. ‘Copied from the design of n jcaptured Zeppelin that came down in England during the world iwar R-33 was completed in 1919. She was the first airship eqaip- ped with sleeping bunks, room and chef, and created his- jtory by producing the first aerial newspaper. Bt SCHOOL OF I’lANO PLAYING ALL GRADES ACCEPTED Mrs, Ruth I’mmabmdt Phore 450 I —-n i FILMS , Developed and cial Rates on Quanti slanrk'(ron Onnfinq ALASKA SCENIC Alaska, | and | air| |tivity, the British government de- dining | i Torn | sanity was lodged again g | and through this thirty-six hour ordeaj| cports all ! Al Smith’s Brown Derby Shined Up for Conventlon Mrs. Moskowitz, Ample]| and Motherly, Is Direct- ing Genius of Campaign y SHIRLEY KIRKE tnternational lllustrated Nows Staif Correspondent EW YORK~—Up at the Bilt: LN more Hotel a motherly woman with a soft, low voice is brushing Governor Al Smith's brown derby into readinces for the Democratic convention. In the midst of telegrams, long distance calls, vases of complimen- tary flowers and young ladies who politely answer the phones, sign for messages and convoy reporicrs to the personages they wish to see, Mrs. Henry Moskowitz, a large, amply-proportioned woman with a serene face, moves coclly and calmy about her untitled job a3 publicity director for the Al Smith presidential campaign. Her desk directly across from George R. Van Namee, pre-conven- tion campaign manager of the Smith forces, is piled high with sheafs of letters awaiting signa- tures, Her telephone rings con- stantly, Assistants call her aside to whisper this and that important person must be seen. And through it all Mrs. Bella Moskowitz remains the same cool-headed, unruffled selt of many years of political ac- tivity. She has been called the Colonel House of Governor Smith's admin- istration—the ambassador without portfolio; one of the most brilliant women in either state or national politics—and her accomplishments bear out these titles. But her truc selt is revealed in the plcture of a plump-cheeked cherub on her desk at Democratic headhuarters. It is her grandson, a “British baby" born to her daughter, Mirlam, who mar- ried an Englishman ‘and lives in Londos. And Mrs. Moskowitz con- fesses that her proudest title is Just—"granny.” Born Bella Linder, daughter of a Harlem watchmaker, she attended York’s wwhWs ~chnola wasior & cause, “MRS. BELLA MOSKOWITZ ™ (International Illustrated News) graduated from Horace Mann and went thence to Teachers' Collc Columbla, where she studied d ly after she finished her course at Columbia she became the bride o Charles Israel, the architect, upon service work as a means of support- ing herself and her chMdren. 1909 she married Dr. Henry Mosko- witz, one-time city commissioner. needed laws and bills; and her ad- es with either of the great | stand; and, their privilege of the ballot relig- fously. For a “suppor: :* who can- Vom TONSILS REMOVED CHARGED WITH INSANITY Olga moved | Hpspital | P o Paul had this morning tonsils re- St. Ann's her at Knut Biovik was brought | ht on the cannery| Capt. Johnson, | from the Deep Sea Salmon com- pany at Port Althorp and i3 in| Mexico City street « have | the Federal Jall. A charge of in-)been ordered to quit use of klax-| him by [ons inside city limit Residents den’t like the noi nto er M Deputy Marshal K, 0. Herriman. " NORTHERN HOTEL ROOMS—50 cents per night and up; $3.00 per week aand up. Public shower and tub baths 50 cents. Ray Oil Burner in peration—Hot water day and night. Rooms $12.00 per th and up—steam heated y 0. SPECIAL SALE ON OIL CLOTH at PAINT STORE JUNEATU ALASKA MEAT CO. Wholesale and Retail Butchers PHONE 39 SEWARD STREET Mr. and Mrs. Coal Consumer: Admiralty Island Furnace Coal should not be confused' with Screeninvs, it contains much coarse coal walnut size and smaller, in fact many of the coal users find it ideal for their cook stoves and heaters. Try a few sacks next time you are order- ing coal. We know you will like it and call for it often. And the price too keeps the coal bill down. Order from your own coal dealer or transfer man. The Admiralty Island Coal Company Juneau, Alaska : Temporary office with H. R. Shepard and Son 115 Seward Street Sg '3’52 409 80 | ers, §! the sum | commercial {| Southeastern | | maties, logic and psychology. Short-| ¢! dren i ana | halibut his weath turned tc social In|in himself a soctal worker and) Mrs. Moskowitz looks upen poll- | ust. tics as a medium for carrying out | vice to woiaen who wish to identity | attle 1 parties is first to study \ carnestly the things for which they | secondly, to exerciso | Jofy not find time to go to the polls isn't | of much avall to either a can®date | | 8% been States, who have in the Cordova on the {Yukun. Mr. Neiding zeneral ;perintendent of the Kennecott Copper Corporation. Miss Alice O'Neill and O'Neill, children of one of I'leading Cordova merchants, are Tel ing west TuKken, af ter attending scheol in the soutl. Mrs. E. Cloudman, whose hus nd is superintendent of the orthwestern Fisheries plant at Dundas Bay, and two children, lare bound for Valdez on the Yu- | kon. To % two daughters, | attending school i { |are houna for i \Twho's wno l AND. WHERE LA . is Mirs, Homer G. Nordiing and children are aboard the Admiral Rogers for Sitka and return. : Miss Mildred Abrahamsen, has been teaching school herg ! during the past sciool term, left for Skagway on the Admiral Ro enrcute to Carcross to spen the who| on ine e and A. Van Maver broker: are passen on the Admiral Rogers. Th | fo 3 going to Sitka, and th latter, companied by Mrs. Var M , is making the round trip. | He will continue with the boat b Petersburg. For a short business trip fo thy |4 R. W. Wiley and W. A |Crah prominent mining men o | W Alaska, left on st Princess Louise this morning Bank Prince Rupert. Mrs. Harcourt Hervey and Doro- E. P. Pond, who has been tak |thy French are tourists on the moving pictures in the Whit, | Yukon. ass country for several days, re H M ! turned on the Northwesiern Portland, Miss Florence Barneit, daugh | ¢hildren ter of the Alaska Steamshiy Com. | Yukon. pany agent Haines, arrived in]Dbanks. B { Juneau on the Northwestern, ana| Harold Sogn, Anchorage young { left for Seward on the Yukoen this] man who has been attending the afternoon, Univ ity of Washington the past Amonrg those leaving for Scat.|term, a passenger on the Yu- tle on the Northwestern were}Kkon. Mrs. Bernt Alstead and two chil-| J. A d Mr. Alstead operatos the|of the Libby, McNeill and Libby boat Thelna, the Ju.|plant at Kenai, is westward bound neau fleet ahoard the Yukon. He is accom- Miss Theodora Budwin, panied by his wife and two chil- the local schools, leit dren. srihwestern for her home in the| Among the round trippers on Sti to spend the summer. Shelthe Yukon is F. W. Martin, presi- { will return to Junean late in Aug|dent of the Metropolitan Bank of | Seattle, who is accompanied by Myrg. Martin and their two chil- dren. On her way to band in Seward, Mrs. Thomas Frothingham is on the Yukon. Mr. Frothingham is a noted lec- on the Admiral Rogers for|turer and big game hunter, and | Sitka to visit with her sister for|is in Alaska to spend tho symmer. la short time. BIRG = 5 T Henry I y Old naners tor saic a: The Empire been Albert W Die- of Valdez, J. C father of the o r the Valdez Dock Company, westward bound on the Yukon. M C. 1. Anderson, wife of Hu- superintendent of the Slaroff Sons Packing Company at ah Bay, is aboard the Yukon. R. Horvey, president of the National Trust and Savings in Los Angeles, his wife, | gire visit in | states, | Eaton, | th fo . Spain, timber man of and his wife and four are tourists aboard the They are going to Fair- at Rasmussen, superintendent of teacher on tie Mr. Moeller and and Mrs., J. W. A, i Robert are bound ior Se on the Northwestern. Hc is with the power plant force at Salmon Creek. Mrs. W. R. Barnett andl join her hus- child man prep local young attending :chool in Santa Clara, Cal, ar rived here on the Yukon. ile will spend the summer in Juneau | whoich | | | | R. A. Semple, new foroman for| This week featuring the Woeck contracts in Juneau,! | was an arrival on the Yukon. Mr Semple is a former Juneau monj land was greeted at the dock by| many of his friends. H. F. Preston, traveling came here on the Yukon h'um“ Ketchikan, i On their way to their home in| Cordova, Mrs. B. B. Neiding and : Assorted | Preserves man, | 3 pound jar —— 3 JAPANESE TOY || SHOP 1 H. B, MATINQ * Front Street P. 0. Box 218 for Mnll Orders —— Special, 75 cents i Swanson Bros. LOWER FRONT ST. GEO. ANDERSON | | il | B Tass Tuoer i Strict Attention Given | Out-of-Town Orders Phonograph Repalring We' call and deliver PHONE 143 Anderson Music Shoppe | » AL e A POINTER If you are not completely satisfied with the fuel you are burning in your fur- nace, range, heater or fire- place grate TRY DIAMOND BRIQUETS “THE ALL-PURPOSE FUEL” Philip! is | - There is now a tax on everything but energy SERVICE WAS FIRST Since our beginning we have built upon cur integrity and usefulness to our customers. Thus we have built an asset. We wish to call your attention to this asset. You may collect on it. Our banking service merits 5 inquiry by you. Others have benefited by it. First National Bunk “There is no Substitute for Safety” DANCE A. B. HALL SATURDAY NIGHT JIENTISTS SAY THAT Pure Ice Cream WILL DO YOU GOOD. You can get 100 per cent pure Ice Cream at the JUNEAU BILLIARDS Phone 94 (jARL§ON’S TAXI — Sanette Cans-Mops- Dust qus-Brooms In fact we can supply anything for your household needs THE Thomas HardwareCe . WHEN YOU BUY CEMENT IT PAYS TO BUY SUPERIOR PORTLAND CEMENT $5.00 PER BARREL RED CEDAR SHINGLES 6 to 2s—$4.75 per M. 5 to 2s clear—$5.00 per M. Get ouy quantity prices on lumber . Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. ~—Lumber For Every Purpose— D e e YOUR DEALER SELLS THEM OR PHONE . Pacific Coast Coal Co. !’BDNE 412 C. D. FERGUSON, Agent ——— IF YOU EMPLOY Five or More Persons AND HAVE NOT READ THE Alaska Compensation Law as amended in 1927, you may not_know that you can lose any amount up to $18,000 as a reault of an accident. We have copies of the new law for distribution and will hand one to you upon request or go over it thh y You should be familiar with t law. It was made to fit your case.” ALLEN SHATTUCK, Inc. INSURANCE—REAL ESTATE

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